- it is not directly possible to provide a variadic join(args...),
due to overload resolution ambiguities
- as a remedy, simplify the invocation of stringify() for the typical cases,
and provide some frequently used shortcuts
VERIFY_ERROR allows to check that an expected except is actually thrown.
The implementation was lazy however;
it just investigated the C-style error flag instead of *really* verifying
that an *lumiera::Exception* with the expected flag was caught.
This discrepancy can be a problem when there is a stray error flag set,
or for some reason the error flag gets cleared before the exception
reaches the top-level catch-block in the test.
Over time, a collection of microbenchmark helper functions was
extracted from occasional use -- including a variant to perform
parallelised microbenchmarks. While not used beyond sporadic experiments yet,
this framework seems a perfect fit for measuring the SyncBarrier performance.
There is only one catch:
- it uses the old Threadpool + POSIX thread support
- these require the Threadpool service to be started...
- which in turn prohibits using them for libary tests
And last but not least: this setup already requires a barrier.
==> switch the existing microbenchmark setup to c++17 threads preliminarily
(until the thread-wrapper has been reworked).
==> also introduce the new SyncBarrier here immediately
==> use this as a validation test of the setup + SyncBarrier
requires to supplement EventLog matching primitives
to pick and verify a specific positional argument.
Moreover, it is more or less arbitrary which job invocation parameters
are unpacked and exposed for verification; we'll have to see what is
actually required for writing tests...
Testcase (detect function invocation) passes now as expected
Some Library / Framework changes
- rename event-log-test.cpp
- allow the ExpectString also to work with concatenated expectation strings
Remark: there was a warning in the comment in event-log.hpp,
pointing out that negative assertions are shallow.
However, after the rework in 9/2018 (commit: d923138d1)
...this should no longer be true, since we perform proper backtracking,
leading to an exhaustive search.
ActivityMatch inherits privately from the EventMatch object,
and is thus able to delegate relevant matching queries, but
also to provide high-level special matchers.
This new design resolves the ambiguity regarding function arguments.
Moreover, we can now record the current sequence-Number as *attribute*
in the respective log record (this is the benefit of using structured
log entries instead of just a textual log), thereby avoiding the various
pitfalls with explicit bracketing sequence-number log entries
bottom line: this reworked design seems to be a better fit,
even while technically the implementation with the wrapped matcher
is somewhat ugly...
The EventLog seems to provide all the building blocks, but we need
some higher level special matchers (and maybe we also want to hide
some of the basic EventLog matchers). A soulution might be to wrap
the EventMatcher and delegate all follow-up builder calls.
This seems adequate, since the EventLog-Matcher is basically used as black box,
building up more elaborate matchers from the provided basic matchers...
Spent some time again to understand how EventLog matching works.
My feelings towards this piece of code are always the same: it is
somewhat too "tricky", but I am not aware of any other technique
to get this degree of elaborate chained matching on structured records,
short of building a dedicated matching engine from scratch.
The other alternative would be to use a flat textual log (instead of
the structured log records from EventLog), but then we'd have to
generate quite intricate regular expressions from the builder,
and I'm really doubtful it would be easier and clearer....
...for coverage of the Activity-Language,
various invocations of unspecific functions must be verified,
with the additional twist that the implementation avoids indirections
and is thus hard to rig for tests.
Solution-Idea: provide a λ-mock to log any invocation into the
Event-Log helper, which was created some years ago to trace GUI communication...
Further extensive testing with parameter variations,
using the test setup in `BlockFlow_test::storageFlow()`
- Tweaks to improve convergence under extreme overload;
sudden load peaks are now accomodated typically < 5 sec
- Make the test definition parametric, to simplify variations
- Extract the generic microbenchmark helper function
- Documentation
several years ago, it seemed like a good idea to incorporate
the link between nominal time and wall-clock time into a dedicated
anchor point, which also regulates the continued frame planning.
But it turned out that such a design mixes up several concepts
and introduces confusion regarding the meaning of "real time"
- latency can not be reasonably defined for a whole planning chunk
- skipping or sliding due to missed deadlines can not reasonably handled
within such an abstract entity; it must be handled rather at the
level of a playback process
- linking the frame grid generation directly to a planning chunk
undercuts the possible abstraction of a planning pipeline
This is a subtle and far reaching fix, which hopefully removes
a roadblock regarding a Dispatcher pipeline: Our type rebinding
template used to pick up nested type definitions, especially
'value_type' and 'reference' from iterators and containers,
took an overly simplistic approach, which was then fixed
at various places driven by individual problems.
Now:
- value_type is conceptually the "thing" exposed by the iterator
- and pointers are treated as simple values, and no longer linked
to their pointee type; rather we handle the twist regarding
STL const_iterator direcly (it defines a non const value_type,
which is sensible from the STL point of view, but breaks our
generic iterator wrapping mechanism)
...this is something I should have done since YEARS, really...
Whenever working with symbolically represented data, tests
typically involve checking *hundreds* of expected results,
and thus it can be really hard to find out where the
failure actually happens; it is better for readability
to have the expected result string immediately in the
test code; now this expected result can be marked
with a user-defined literal, and then on mismatch
the expected and the real value will be printed.
- detailed documentation of known problematic behaviour
when working with rational fractions
- demonstrate the heuristic predicate to detect dangerous numbers
- add extensive coverage and microbenchmarks for the integer-logarithm
implementation, based on an example on Stackoverflow. Surprising result:
The std::ilog(double) function is of comparable speed, at least for
GCC-8 on Debian-Buster.
As it turns out, using the functional-notation form conversion
with *parentheses* will fall back on a C-style (wild, re-interpret) cast
when the target type is *not* a class. As in the case in question here, where
it is a const& to a class. To the contrary, using *curly braces* will always
attempt to go through a constructor, and thus fail as expected, when there is
no conversion path available.
I wasn't aware of that pitfall. I noticed it since the recently introduced
class TimelineGui lacked a conversion operator to BareEntryID const& and just
happily used the TimelineGui object itself and did a reinterpret_cast into BareEntryID
well... reduction in size of the debug build objects
turns out not to be so large as I hoped. But it is significant anyway,
about 3-4MB on the most affected test classes. Plus from now on we
do not repeat that code on other tests using the same features.
up to now, EventLog was header only, which seems to cause
a significant bloat in terms of generated code size, especially
in debug builds. One major source for this kind of "template bloat"
is the IterChainSearch, rsp. the filter and transformer iterators.
And since EventLog is not meant for performance critical application code,
but rather serves as helper for writing unit tests, an obvious remedy is
to move that problematic part of the code down into a dedicate translation
unit, instead of using inline functions. To prepare this refactoring,
some var arg (templated) API funcitons need to be segregated.
For the before / after chaining search functions,
we now do one single step in the respective direction before evaluating
the new (next) filter condition. However, we also need to *deactivate* the
previous condition, otherwise that single "step" might cause us to jump
or even exhaust the underlying filter, due to the old filter condition
still being applied.
due to the lack of real backtracking, the existing solution
relied on a quirk, and started the before / after chained search
conditions /at/ the current element, not after / before it.
Now we're able to remove this somewhat surprising behaviour, yet to do so
we also need to introduce basic "just search" variations of all search
operations, in order to define the initial condition for a chained search.
Without that, the first condition in a chain would never be able to
match on the header entry of the log
- need to use dedicated steps in the chain for every added condition now
- seems to break the logic on tests on non-match.
This doesn't come as a surprise, since backtracking can be expected
to reveal additional solutions.
NOTE: some tests broken, to be investigated
est-event-log-test.cpp:228: thread_1: verify_callLogging: (log.ensureNot("fun").after("fun").after("fun2"))
while this is basically a drop-in replacement,
it marks the switch to the monadic evaluation technology,
which is prerequisite for building real backtracking into the search.
seemingly my quick-n-dirty implementation was to naiive.
We need real backtracking, if we want to support switches
in the search direction (match("y").after("x").before("z")
Up to now, I have cheated myself around this obvious problem :-/
_not_ using the dependency factory, rather direct access
- to a shared object in the enclosing stack frame
- to a heap allocated existing object accessed through uniqe_ptr
Most dependencies within Lumiera are singletons and this approach remains adequate.
Singletons are not "EVIL" per se. But in some cases, there is an explicit
lifecycle, managed by some subsystem. E.g. some GUI services are only available
while the GTK event loop is running.
This special case can be integrated transparently into our lib::Depend<TY> front-end,
which defaults to creating a singleton otherwise.
reason is, only files with a @file comment will be processed
with further documentation commands. For this reason, our Doxygen
documentation is lacking a lot of entries.
HOWTO:
find src -type f \( -name '*.cpp' -or -name '*.hpp' \) -not -exec egrep -q '\*.+@file' {} \; -print -exec sed -i -r -e'\_\*/_,$ { 1,+0 a\
\
\
/** @file §§§\
** TODO §§§\
*/
}' {} \;
...when the Test-Nexus processes a command binding message.
In the real system of course we do not want to log every bind message.
The challenge here is the fact that command binding as such
is opaque, and the types of the data within the bind message
are opaque as well. Finally I settled on the compromise
to log them as strings, but only the DataCap part;
most value types applicable within GenNode
have a string representation to match.
since our test.sh runner can be used to verify the
expected output printed by tests, working with these
output transcripts of larger tests can be hard at times.
These separators help to find who produced which output
and they prevent a regexp match to grep beyond the feed
of a single function (which can be a common problem
when using the self-diagnostic output of the facility
currently in test, which obviously will be similar
on any data printed.
turns out this is a tricky situation.
We want to accept pretty mutch everything, yet we want to get a grip
on anything object-like, so to reveal available RTTI information.
Now, given the way C++ template substitution works, the 'TY const&' overload
wins with only a few exceptions. The reason is, C++ invokes most functions
passing the concrete argument as reference, unless this is not possible,
because the concrete artument is a rvalue. The automatic reduction of
reference expressions does the rest. Consequently the overload with 'const&'
turns out to be the best match even when we invoke the function with a
pointer expression, which would then be made into a pointer-to-a pointer
by our forward call.
There are two remedies for this dilemma:
- make the second overload just typeStr (TY&)
- explicitly remove the second overload for pointers
The first solution unfortunately would rule out passing of anonymous
objects like concatenated strings; in fact it would rule out passing
rvalues as such. While the second solution, chosen here, works really
for everything, and also has the nice side effect of stripping away
any const, pointer and reference adornements elegantly before we
even start to analyse the type.
The only downside of this solution is that it looks intimidating
to the casual reader. Well, I'd say, get used to it.
over time, we got quite a jungle with all those
shome-me-the-type-of helper functions.
Reduced and unified all those into
- typeString : a human readable, slightly simplified full type
- typeSymbol : a single word identifier, extracted lexically from the type
note: this changeset causes a lot of tests to break,
since we're using unmangeled type-IDs pretty much everywhere now.
Beore fixing those, I'll have to implement a better simplification
scheme for the "human readable" type names....